It Is This Because People Say So Also Because It Is A Jewish Tradition That Has Been Followed For Many Years.
step three
maror
Mah - Roar
Maror (מרור)
Maror (מרור)
Maror is the bitter herbs which we eat in the Passover Seder meal (Exodus ch.12) to commemorate the bitterness (Exodus ch.1) of the Egyptian slavery.
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Maror symbolizes the bitterness and harshness of slavery that the Israelites endured in Egypt. It serves as a reminder of the suffering of the Jewish people and the need to empathize with those who are oppressed.
Without recalling the bitterness of the exile we do not appreciate the sweetness of the redemption.
The Passover Hagaddah (or Story) states that "Whoever does not say these three things has not fulfilled his obligation: Pesach, Matzah, Maror." Pesach is the pascal lamb offering that is no longer brought as the Temple in Jerusalem no longer stands. In the days of the Temple, thousands of lambs were slaughtered on the eve of Passover to be eaten that night along with the matzah and the maror, the bitter herb (traditionally, romaine lettuce or horseraddish). Today we eat only the matzah and maror.
In Jewish tradition, the maror (מרור) symbolizes the bitterness. "Mar" means bitter. In most family traditions, horseradish is used for the maror during the Passover meal. In Israel, Romaine lettuce is also widely used.
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